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Western Wood-Pewee : ウィキペディア英語版 | Western wood pewee
The western wood pewee (''Contopus sordidulus'') is a small tyrant flycatcher. Adults are gray-olive on the upperparts〔Cornell Lab of Ornithology〕 with light underparts, washed with olive on the breast. They have two wing bars and a dark bill with yellow at the base of the lower mandible. This bird is very similar in appearance to the eastern wood pewee; the two birds were formerly considered to be one species. The call of ''C. sordidulus'' is a loud buzzy ''peeer''; the song consists of three rapid descending ''tsee''s ending with a descending ''peeer''. ==Habitat and ecology==
Their breeding habitat is open wooded areas in western North America. These birds migrate to South America at the end of summer. The female lays two or three eggs in an open cup nest on a horizontal tree branch or within a tree cavity; California black oak forests are examples of suitable nesting habitat for this species of bird.〔C. Michael Hogan, 2008〕 Both parents feed the young. They wait on a perch at a middle height in a tree and fly out to catch insects in flight (hawking), sometimes hovering to pick insects from vegetation (gleaning).
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